Prognostic Value of Fractional Flow Reserve Linking Physiologic Severity to Clinical Outcomes

  • Johnson, Nils P.
  • Tóth, Gábor G.
  • Lai, Dejian
  • Zhu, Hongjian
  • Açar, Göksel
  • Agostoni, Pierfrancesco
  • Appelman, Yolande
  • Arslan, Fatih
  • Barbato, Emanuele
  • Chen, Shao-Liang
  • Di Serafino, Luigi
  • Domínguez-Franco, Antonio J.
  • Dupouy, Patrick
  • Esen, Ali M.
  • Esen, Özlem B.
  • Hamilos, Michalis
  • Iwasaki, Kohichiro
  • Jensen, Lisette O.
  • Jiménez-Navarro, Manuel F.
  • Katritsis, Demosthenes G.
  • Kocaman, Sinan A.
  • Koo, Bon-Kwon
  • López-Palop, Ramón
  • Lorin, Jeffrey D.
  • Miller, Louis H.
  • Muller, Olivier
  • Nam, Chang-Wook
  • Oud, Niels
  • Puymirat, Etienne
  • Rieber, Johannes
  • Rioufol, Gilles
  • Rodés-Cabau, Josep
  • Sedlis, Steven P.
  • Takeishi, Yasuchika
  • Tonino, Pim A.L.
  • Van Belle, Eric
  • Verna, Edoardo
  • Werner, Gerald S.
  • Fearon, William F.
  • Pijls, Nico H.J.
  • De Bruyne, Bernard
  • Gould, K. Lance
Publication date
October 2014

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundFractional flow reserve (FFR) has become an established tool for guiding treatment, but its graded relationship to clinical outcomes as modulated by medical therapy versus revascularization remains unclear.ObjectivesThe study hypothesized that FFR displays a continuous relationship between its numeric value and prognosis, such that lower FFR values confer a higher risk and therefore receive larger absolute benefits from revascularization.MethodsMeta-analysis of study- and patient-level data investigated prognosis after FFR measurement. An interaction term between FFR and revascularization status allowed for an outcomes-based threshold.ResultsA total of 9,173 (study-level) and 6,961 (patient-level) lesions were included wit...

Extracted data

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